The Voice of Reason

Carole-Anne Tyler
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Abstract

Abstract:We think of voice as a means of rational self-expression by which we convey our "interests" to others with competing interests. But language is a social contract preceding the social contract proper that it enables, raising questions about how and why someone makes sense of nonsense. Structuralists and poststructuralists argue the voice comes from the Other and is alienating. It constitutes speakers and interests both; speakers only seem to precede the words whose effect they are. As Benveniste shows, the pronouns "I" and "you" produce those represented by them as "echoes," reversible and reciprocal, just as in the universalism of political representation Spivak explores in her famous essay on the subaltern. Yet subjects are not fully alienated when interpellated by an Other or made entirely abstract by the universalism of names. Language affords a bonus sense from what might seem nonsense, as in jokes, which evade the censoring ego. Desire cannot be reduced to rational demands and is the remainder of language and the dialectic of subject and other, aligned with voice as what is left when the signified is subtracted from the signifier. There is a performative dimension to language as individuals take it up that subverts abstract universalism.
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理性之声
摘要:我们认为声音是一种理性的自我表达方式,通过这种方式,我们将自己的“利益”传达给利益竞争的其他人。但语言是一种社会契约,它先于它所促成的社会契约,这引发了人们对某人如何以及为什么理解胡说八道的疑问。结构主义者和后结构主义者认为,这种声音来自他者,正在疏远他人。它既包含演讲者,也包含利益;演讲者似乎只是在他们所起作用的单词之前。正如Benveniste所展示的那样,代词“我”和“你”产生了由它们代表的“回声”,可逆和互惠,就像Spivak在她关于subaltern的著名文章中探索的政治代表的普世主义一样。然而,当被他者追问时,主体并没有完全异化,或者被名字的普世主义弄得完全抽象。语言从看似无稽之谈中提供了一种额外的感觉,比如在笑话中,它避开了自我审查。欲望不能被简化为理性的需求,它是语言的剩余部分,是主体与他人的辩证法,与声音保持一致,就像从能指中减去所指时剩下的一样。当个人学习语言时,语言有一个表演维度,颠覆了抽象的普遍主义。
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期刊介绍: Pacific Coast Philology publishes peer-reviewed essays of interest to scholars in the classical and modern languages, literatures, and cultures. The journal publishes two annual issues (one regular and one special issue), which normally contain articles and book reviews, as well as the presidential address, forum, and plenary speech from the preceding year''s conference. Pacific Coast Philology is the official journal of the Pacific Ancient and Modern Language Association, a regional branch of the Modern Language Association. PAMLA is dedicated to the advancement and diffusion of knowledge of ancient and modern languages and literatures. Anyone interested in languages and literary studies may become a member. Please visit their website for more information.
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